I guess most of you have probably come across blogs which have one of these disclaimers:

This is my personal opinion, and not my employers.

Here are my thoughts on these.

Perspective

I think there is always a certain point of view when you read these things.

If you have to put this on your personal blog because your opinion and your employer's opinion differ so much, it might be time to find another job. For a second, let's focus on other areas in life. We are clearly not referring to the technical details of an implementation, programming languages or your open source license of choice. These are all non-issues where these kind of disclaimers are not necessary. So if you catch my drift — I don't even remotely understand how anyone can possibly spend eight hours a day working for someone who you disagree with on the really important issues.

If you happen to be the employer yourself or hold a management position in that company and still try to distance yourself from your own shop, then who are you kidding really? I find it hard to believe that for example people oppose war when they are at home, but during the work day they manage to run a company who's a weapon supplier.

Fin

There is absolutely nothing wrong with expressing your opinion. You can even donate all your money if you think that is really necessary. I really don't care if you're in favour or against something.

But please get real: your own statements will always reflect on the place you work at. In one way or another.

There is one thing which annoyed me a lot in 2011: the general topic is Women in Tech.

I'm not annoyed because I don't like women or don't want them to attend conferences. I'm annoyed because nothing happens.

Status Quo

For the most part it's guys at conference who discuss what can be done about it.

For example, I don't remember how exactly we got into this discussion at Funconf, but at the time we even had two orthree women in the room when this was brought up. And I guess two women in a room with 15-20 guys is an exceptionally high rate for tech conference.

Side-note: I really wish I had asked them at the time how comfortable they are with this topic to begin with.

Outside conferences, the discussion happens in blogs and on Twitter. For example, there are frequently women in my Twitter timeline (I don't want to single anyone out.), who mention things like the female-male-ratio of attendees at tech conferences ("Too many guys!") and usually end with that there are too many guys who give talks.

Of course they have every right to mention this, but are women even submitting talks to these conferences? It often seems like a chicken-egg-problem to me.

Rhetorical question: Am I an asshole for pointing out that complaining gets you nowhere.

Issues

Drifting off the gender topic, there are in fact many other issues in the tech world.

For example, let's take a brief look at another sensitive subject: the ratio of white and non-white attendees at tech conferences (in the western world). I would be blind if I said there is no racism. Of course it's omni-present, but that doesn't make everyone a racist.

Racial issues aside, there are countless other examples where people might not feel welcome or at home when they attend a tech conference. Change has to come on many different levels and while some people might say, "Boys will be boys.", that doesn't mean we shouldn't be a little more aware.

Making change

Getting back to my original topic: of course part of changing the game is that conferences will have to cater to women also.

I'm honestly not sure what exactly needs to be done. Part of it would be to drop panel discussions about "Women in Tech". I got the suggestion that this is not just annoying for male attendees but a reason for potential female attendees to avoid a conference as well.

Leadership

So apart from conferences changing, I think the key is: women need to get involved.

First off: it's tough to go to places where you are a minority. I've done that myself, I can relate. I also realize there are women at tech conferences who do this already. But others who are more vocal on Twitter or blogs currently, need to follow them and do the same.

Words are powerful. But they won't take us all the way. Actions are required: please lead by example and change will follow.

More input

One of the areas where conferences need female expertise is (obviously) running a conference. This may sound a little snarky, but I doubt that guys will get it right otherwise. Women need to shape conferences from the top in order to change them. Join up, or roll your own.

Another important part is giving talks. It's simple: if you'd like to see more female speakers at conferences, you should submit a talk. I find it a little unbearable when the most vocal people demand more female speakers at conferences but do not submit talks themselves to begin with.

Fin

For the past years men complain that there are no women at tech conferences. And when men try to answer why, I think they are just guessing. If women know why, then we should start to discuss a solution.

If women don't know why, then maybe they need to ask themselves.

That's me venting — from 10,000 ft. Hit me up if you want to discuss any of this.

I found myself pondering today when I tried to figure out what I want to say or write about Steve Jobs passing away. Because whatever I wanted to share seemed not appropriate and just not good enough.

I watched his Standford speech (again) and while I think this speech did not have the edge and finesse his usual Apple-related appearances did, it contains so much wisdom and enlightenment. Fundamentals which do not just apply to young people but everyone else as well.

I could still go on to talk about how he revolutionized music, phones and computers. How his diet saved a lot animals. But I just feel that wouldn't do him justice.

So Sourceforge is complaining about people hating on Twitter. First off: haters gonna hate!. Sourceforge should know better and not feed the trolls.

Then, people complain for a reason. For years your website has been complicated and actual development (not distribution) has stagnated on Sourceforge. To me it seemed like the primary objective was maximizing income from advertisement. Yes, you guys relaunched a few times, but unfortunately never got it quite right. Having said that, of course this is about open source, but the platform is equally important. I don't want to suggest to copy Github, but they really manage to do a lot of things right.